The Mooreland Leader. (Mooreland, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, April 6, 1923 Page: 2 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Mooreland Leader and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THE LEADER MOORELAND OKLAHOMA
Radical on Trial at St Joseph Mich
MUTTON SAUSAGE SUGGESTED TO
DISPOSE OF SURPLUS MATERIAL
me LireeliffM
iayfield’s Seat in Senate Is Contested
The controversy over Hie Ku Kins
Klnn was tnk(‘n Into the United States
Semite with the filing of proceedings
contesting the right of Knrle It May
field to become a senator from Texas
The contest was brought hy George
K It I'eddy Keiiulillcan and "Indo-
Iiendent IemocnitleM candidate for
senator In the election last November
who declared himself elected despite
the majority credited to Mayfield Item-
erratic nominee A scathing indictment
of the klnn of which It was charged
flint Mayfield was n member wus In-
cluded In the petition
Klnn officers were charged with
“Illegal and fraudulent” acts In the
petition which ulso alleged fraud In
counting the ballots Illegal expendi-
tures of more than $1500110 In May-
field's behalf and numerous other ir-
regularities The senate was asked to preserve
and recount the Texas ballots to In-
vestigate the Texas primary and election and to prohibit Mayfield from bik-
ing the oath when the next congress convenes
Muyficld's credentials having been received the whole matter will be re-
ferred to the privileges nnd elections committee and pending the committees
investigation the oath will be administered
Our Woman Assistant Attorney General
Mrs Mubel Walker Wlllebrandt
wlm Is known to fume as one of 1 lie
assistant United Slates attorney gen-
erals evidently lias considerable “pep”
A way she forfeited $10 la traffic
cuurt at Washington when she fulled
v appear to answer to n charge of
hdntlng speed regulations She had
een stopped by a motorcycle police-
man nnd served with notice to appear
In court it was said hy the police and
when she failed to do so had been ar-
rested on n warrant und required to
put up the collateral which she for-
feited Mrs Wlllebrandt ennte originally
from a little town In Michigan— Buck-
ley — where her father Itnvld W Walk-
er was n banker It wus largely to
fulfill a lifelong desire of her father
that Mrs Wlllebrandt took up the law
at the University of Southern Cali-
fornia In los Angeles
? Wlllebrandt first taught
school Mulligan then In Arizona and In Ctdlforiila It was while she was
principal of the high school nt I'lisadcna that she decided 11 lake up the law
course will) two classes n day one at 8 o'doek In the morning and the other
nt 5 o'clock In t’ e evening It was fixe years before she obtained her diploma
and filially was admitted to the bar for her attendance was intermittent
Hines New Head of Veterans Bureau
I'rlg Gen Crank Thomas Hines Is
the new divertor of the veterans' bu-
reau One of the first messages to
reaeli him was this: "You've taken u
devil of a Job"
"I am not nt nil sure I can get
nwny wllli tills thing” the general said
"but I'm going to do Illy level best
There is no illtfereiiee of opinion from
President Harding down us to what
ought to be done There Is n consid-
erable difference of opinion ns to how
It should he done If hard work will
get it done the right way I will pull
through"
To make the Job even harder the
first thing General Hines has got to
do Is all smirleil up with polities He
lias got to help n congressional eom-
niiltoe Investigate Ids bureau
"This” he said “Is the Mg thing
immediately In front of me We will
give full eo-operntion nnd It Is to be
hoped that the inquiry will be benefi-
flclnl not only to the veterans but to the bureau Itself" The fact that General
Jllnes who Is not a West Pointer has reached his present position shows lie's
u big man for a big Job He made mi enviable reputation In charge of the em-
barkation service during the World war He Is forty-four years of age He
began his army career as a private In t lie Philippines In the Spaulsh-Aaicricau
war
Newspaper Man Ambassador to Spain
Alexander I Moore of Pittsburgh
Tn has been nppolnted amhassador to
Fpnln lie succeeds Cyrus K Woods
of Pennsylvania who has been appoint-
ed amhassador to Japan In place of
Charles It Wnrren resigned Mr
Moore win) recently retired from t lie
publishing business is fifty-six years
old and bus been n close friend of
President Harding for many years Mr
Moore sailed for Kurope on Hie George
Washington lie wns assigned lo oc-
cupy the same suite he hud when he
sailed a little more than a year ago
with Ills wife the lute Illlhm Itussell
who made a tmir of Kurope for the
secretary of labor to study emigration
problem a
Mr Moore said he would dohnrk
nt Cherbourg and go direct to Paris
remaining there for a short time He
will then visit other parts of Kurope
to do some special diplomatic work
for Secretary of State Hughes Mr
Moore thought he would reach Madrid within a month His niece Mrs Mil-
dred Andrews Martin ulso of Pittsburgh will Join him at the embassy
Dill the Youngest Senator in Congress?
Clarence C I 1 II of Spokane Wash
will be the youngest member of the
senate In the Slxty-elghtli congress It
Is stated Anyway he was horn In
1SS in Ohio He succeeds Miles Poin-
dexter who goes to Peru as uinlui'-su-dor
He Is a college man nnd began Ilfs
ns n newspaper nqsirter In Cleveland
In IfKiS!) he was n high school teacher
In Dubuque la The next year lie was
ndmlUed to the Washington har nnd
has practiced In Spokane He has
been In politics since 11)12 when he
wns chairman of the iHqnocratlc stute
convention lie was pi Ivnte secretary
to Governor Lister for it year
Although so young he will he aide
to find his way about Washington In-
asmuch ns he hns been a member of
the house He represented the Fifth
Washington district In the Sixty-fourth
congress (1915-17)
They do say thnt when Senator-
Elect Dill il a farm boy In Ohio In 1001 Mrs Fannie Itall a neighbor loaned
him a quarter to go to a church socluble to be repaid when he got to congress
William Z Foster and the Jury
which Is trying him at St Joseph
Mich on a charge of violating the
syndicalism law through attending
the communist conxentlon held In
the sand dunes near St Joseph lust
A ugiist
Sault Ste Marie
-c - j-y - i -M
At the Sault Ste Marie locks t lie biggest freight locks In the world the spring breakup of thelce pack permit-
ting waiting commerce to go through 1ms Just been necompanled by feverish excitement greater this year than evet
before because of the record-breaking t rutile The photograph shoxvg some of the many freighters making their xxaj
through the locks
To Give Indian Temple and Relics
Victor ii rvans noted patent attorney nnd chief counsel for most of the
Indian tribes la the United States who Is soon to make an offer to congress of
an Indian relic temple bousing a rare collection of 5000 curios ut an approxi-
mate cost of $2501 urn The proposed building may be built In the National
Zoological park The only provision iu Mr Evuus' offer Is that the government
donate the ground
Congressman
xliLdSi rwcrr
-
i
r 4?'
f- & fAS&JP&t
1
it'G”'
t i ” a £ £
i '
'
Dressed In the regulation “gob” uniform lteprescntallve Alliert Johnson
of Washington a member of tlie party on hoard the Henderson at Panama
gets u taste of real navy enlisted life He Is slioxvn tuklng orders from
Captain McNamee
SCRAPS
The earth xvatibles u little about Its
axia
liatnbon trees bloom only twice In n
century
Butnr xvns used Iy tlie ancients at
tines ms fuel
NIGHT IN SCOTCH HIGHLANDS
In the early July days the High-
lands may truly be called a land where
there Is no night xvrltes a correspond-
ent of the Loudon Daily Mall from
Elgin Seotland for sunset am) sunrise
are really one nnd the same (iffictully
the sun uppears for about six hours
but the track of Its pussnge from north-
west to northeast Is marked by a crim-
son glotv above the horizon which
serves to link the long summer days
together In nn unbroken chain
Locks Open for Rush of Traffic
'
1
' if v'
C- IT i
r7 v 1 1
f vi gSi“vtg ? ! i
7 4 JM 4- v kv?! I
I ’ r ? 4 i
i
Takes Orders
s”x£r r'-ssrJ' -v
The xvord “Jehovah" occurs CSG2
thnes In the Pilite
Gold xvii s the only metal that Inter-
ested Neolithic peoples
Hindoos prefer traveling on vessels
with more than two funnels
In Europe It Is customary to leave
visiting cards on the graves 'of poets
Ocean Ale Vives
In Virginia In whose tidal waters
they nre numerous a species of her-
ring are used to fertilize the fields nnd
nre known as ale wives In Cunodn
they are called gnspnroos The true
herring Is never found In fresh water
American markets are supplied with
him from the ocenn off Newfoundland
nnd Nova Scotia where he Is found
almost as plentiful as during his run
In the spring of each year from the
sexes®
- i
SLAIN MODEL’S “ANGEL”
Wfo: ?
1 Kenrsley Mitchell prominent Id
business und society In Philadelphia
nnd the son-lu-luxv of K T Stotesbury
partner In J P Morgan & Co 1ms
been Identified as the mysterious “Mr
Marsluill” who was the liberal friend
of Dorothy Keenan artists’ model xvho
xx'as slain In her New York apartment
He wns with the girl a fexv hours b
fare her death
IT HAD TO COME
It really Isn't danced to the tune of
“Hark from the tombs” but It It
based on the sketches on the walls ol
old Tut's last resting place — the Tub
Ankh-Amen fox trot
Very Like a Bird
They were doing n xveek In n smut
town and the Impresario wasn't satis-
fied xxltli the notices Ills star w ns get-
ting from the local editor So he cor
tiered tliut gentleman and proceeded
to hand out a lot of descriptive mutter
about the lady’s home life her pearls
anil her poodle He touched lightly
on one or txvo divorce episodes spoke
of her arduous training and mentioned
the intent soaps she had Indorsed
“And" lie concluded “she sings like
a bird"
“Just like a bird” assented the ed-
itor dryly “Got a few trills and that’s
ulL”
const of Ilolinnd clonr tip to the fjords
of Norway He Is said to he the least
bony of all edible fishes nrd tlie best
flavored Several hundred years ago
when the herring run did not put In
Its appearance off the const of Hol-
land that country suffered a setback
such ns It bad not experienced since
(lie tulip craze
More Necessary
"Will you have n permanent wave?"
“No what I need Is permanco’
hulr" — Exchange
Mutton or Lamb May
(Prepared by the fftatM Department
of Agriculture )
Reef and pork is not tlie only mix-
ture suitable for sausage A com-
bination of mutton or lamb with
pork may ulso be used for such a pur-
pose according to the United States
Department of Agriculture
General Formula
A general formula Is:
Lamb or mutton 2 Fat pork 1 part
parts Salt and ncasnnlng
Dan fresh pork 1 to suit the taste
part
Combine ail tlie Ingredients nnd put
them through a sausage grinder This
sausage muy he made into cakes and
cooked at once or packed in skins
or hags about 2Va Inches In diameter
uud stored like pork sausage It Is
PLAN FOR CLEANING SILVER
Common Table Salt and Boiling Water
Are Useful— Rub With Good
Abrasive Polish
A satisfactory method for denning
household silver according to the
United States Department of Agricul-
ture Is g follows: An enatm-l or
ngate ware dish should be partly
filled with a cleaning solution of one
teasHXonful of common table salt to
each quart of water anil placed di-
rectly on the stove to boll A sheet
of aluminum or clean xlnc should
then be dropped Into tbo dish and
the tarnished silver placed In contact
with this metal It Is best that the
silver he entirely covered with the
ch-nning solution and that the solu-
tion remain at the boiling tempera-
ture As soon ns the tarnish has been
removed tlie silver should tie removed
rinsed In clean water nnd wiped with
a soft doth
Aluminum corrodes quickly In the
denning solution so that nluui'niim
dishes of any value for culinary pur-
poses should never he used Alum-
inum xvare that would otherwise be
thrown away or any Inexpensive piece
of the metal xvlll serve very satisfac-
torily for ch'nn’ng silver Zinc may
he used in phieo of aluminum hut it
becomes corroded and Inactive In n
much shorter time Tlie electrolytic
method may he used as frequently ns
Is necessary to return e the tarnMi
hut It Is necessary to rub the silver
with some good abrasive polish only
ns often ns may he desirable to re-
store the burnished npiteuranre
PRUNES GOOD IN EMERGENCY
Addition of Few Chopped Nut Meats
and Decorated With Whipped
Cream Is Attractive
Unexpected company — and nothing
In the Imuse for dessert! Of course
one wouldn’t think of offering guests
who have come from n distance Hie
plain old prunes the children had for
lunch— and there Isn't time to rook
anything In one way or another al-
most every housekeeper has been In
this dilemma IVliat one Ingenious
woman (lid wns to pit nnd mash the
luncheon prunes and add to them n
few chopped nut meats — half a cup-
ful to a pint of prune pulp She
stirred In a tablespnonful of lemon
Juice nnd two tnhlespoonfuls of sugar
nnd served the result with cream from
the top of the milk bottle This des-
sert became so popular she was called
on to prepare It frequently nnd when
she wanted to make It look very at-
tractive— nnd was not bridirlng an
emergency — she put It Into individual
pastry shells nnd decorated It with
whipped cream When she couldn't
get whipped cream she made a me-
ringue of egg-white nnd sugar nnd
browned It delicately before serving
The children liked this prune nnd
nut mixture In their school lunches
Instead of preserves occasionally and
served on plain crackers or hctxveen
two crackers It was appetizing with
a cup of tea The United States De-
partment of Agrlnilture Indorses this
prune and nut mixture for these uses
CODDLED EGGS ARE FAVORED
Plan Suggested for Cooking in Such a
Way That Whitea Will Not
Be Overcooked
Mijny means have been suggested for
cooking eggs In such a way that ttie
yolks will be conked und the xvhltcs
xx III not he overcooked One of tlie
most satisfactory is by coddling which
Is done us follows: Alloxv a cupful of
water to each egg bring the water to
the boiling point remove it from the
fire put in tlie eggs cover the dish
closely und leave tlie eggs in tlie water
for about seven minutes There Is
some uncertainty about tills method
for eggs differ In weight und ulso In
temperature ut the time the cooking
begins On tlie whole however this
result can be obtained by pouring hot
water over eggs If the same dish xvitli
the same nmomit of water is always
used but each cook must make her
uxxn rules
LARGE SQUARE COLLAR
The very wide square collar Is seen
iompotlng with the large round ber-
tha Since this hns the tendency to
five a wide shoulder line It Is recom-
mended only for the slender girl
SILK BANDANNAS
Silk bandanna handkerchiefs which
are admirably adapted to blouses or
for trimmings on huts and gowns are
wiling at a reasonable price
Be Used for Sausage
often convenient particularly In ths-
warmer months to make only small
quantities for Immediate use
Sausage No 1
1 pound mutton or '4 toaspoonful black
lamb free from pepper
bone V teaspoonful salt
H pound fat fresh b teaspoonfut each
pork marjoram thyme
and aaxe
Follow the directions for the general
formula In preparing this sausage
Sausage No 2
bi pound mutton or !i teaspoonful each
lamb free from marjoram thyme
bone and ease
4 pound veal H teaspoonful black
r pound salt pork pepper
teaspoonful Balt
In preparing tide suusnge follow the
directions for the general formula
CLUB GIRLS WEAR UNIFORMS
Rolldale Organization in Meade Coun-
ty Kansas First to Complets
Dresses for Meetings
irrparcl by lbs T'nltnl Statt Department
of Agriculture )
The first girls' dub In the state of
Kansas In UCJ In which loo per cent
of the members completed the mak-
ing of club uniforms to be worn at
their meetings was the Kolldale dab
In Meade county Although these girls
live on farms nad are very busy with
the regular xvork of the farm home
they always find time for their club
work One girl reported to the ex-
tension agent of the United States
Department of Agriculture and the
state college of ugrlculture that be-
m
'"r tfSQix
rp
&
- Jih
A Member of the Rolldaie Chris' Club
txveen one meeting nnd the next she
bail sledded 21) acres of kafir corn
Another had harrowed nnd sledded 12
acres of coni a third had helped can
12 quarts of beans besides assisting
xvitli the general house work and
chores while a fourth girl not to he
left out reported thnt she had enught
eight ruts In a trap
Club work has resulted In giving to
girls xvlin have left school something
xx'orth while to xvork toward Romo
knowledge of lioxv to do the ordinary
tilings about the farm home Iu the
best und easiest xvny
Of INTEREST TO
THE HOUSEWIFE
Union Juice will remove rust froiq
knixes
Cold ten Is excellent for cleaning
varnished paper
Remember that the boiler fire will
burn rubbish and dried garden refuso
quite us xvell us It xvlll coal
Have n box of matches near the
stove Don't xvalk across the kitchen
Id times a day for them
ltaln spots on doth will not become
icrinnnrnt If Immediately xvlped off In
the direction of the nap using u piece
of soft silk
When boiling a pudding in a cloth
put an dd plate nt the bottom of the
saucepan to prevent the pudding from
sticking to the pan
Drain your dishes nfter wiping the
silver When dry they are ready for
the next meal Suves endless steps to
china cupboard and hack again Suves
dish towels too
To remove Iron rust from lace use
lemon Jab's nnd salt and expose to
the sunshine If stains xvlll not yield
to treatment a xvlilte lace that Is
spotted may bo given an ecru tint by
rinsing iu coffee
EVENING FR0CK8
A stunning evening gown Is ot
white crepe with an elaborate desgn
worked out In green heads and )
a low girdle of sable
RUFFLE3
The old-fashioned ruffle Is making
Its way back Into fashion's favor We
find It outlining many of the drape lies
thut are so smartly used on fall
frocka
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Schnoebelen, Omar. The Mooreland Leader. (Mooreland, Okla.), Vol. 21, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, April 6, 1923, newspaper, April 6, 1923; Mooreland, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1818177/m1/2/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed July 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.